Abstract

Computational models can project how changes in land use and management will affect soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks over time, but these models usually assume an unchanging climate. We investigate how incorporating climate change projections affects carbon sequestration and SOC stocks. We apply the Rothamsted Carbon model (RothC) to study agricultural land use and management transitions in the U.S. state of Vermont, comparing several regenerative farming strategies, as well as afforestation, against business-as-usual. In 11 relatively-homogeneous Ecoregions within the study area, we run simulations for each land management scenario from 2022–2099, under both projected climate change and the static climate normal from 1991–2021. We use downscaled climate projections from four Global Climate Models, forced by RCP 4.5, that bracket the range of likely climate change. We find that rising temperatures decrease SOC stocks compared to static climate runs by 9.1% to 19.9% across management scenarios, leading to net SOC loss even under many regenerative farming scenarios. Other regenerative practices, notably rotational grazing, could maintain or slightly increase SOC through 2099, and old-growth afforestation could increase statewide stocks by up to 4.5 Mt. Although the potential for farmland management to increase SOC over current levels is diminished when accounting for climate change, it remains important to incentivize regenerative agriculture and afforestation, because this may be the only way to avoid SOC losses by end-of-century.

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